There are four different expiration date Intrade securities on the discovery of the Higgs Boson particle that have trading prices. Payment of $10.00 per contract is made if the Higgs is discovered before the expiration date of the contract.
- Higgs Boson discovery before December 31, 2011 Intrade security price is $3.00 or 30 percent.
- Higgs Boson discovery before December 31, 2012 Intrade security price is $4.50 or 45 percent.
- Higgs Boson discovery before December 31, 2013 Intrade security price is $3.00 or 30 percent.
- Higgs Boson discovery before December 31, 2014 Intrade security price is $5.00 or 50 percent.
One reason may be Intrade's Rule 1.4. (Any changes to the result after the contract has expired will not be taken into account - Exchange Rule 1.4 -- see below).
If there is publication in a major scientific journal of the observation of the Higgs Boson particle before expiration of the Intrade contract, the holder will be paid. Any event that happens after the expiration date of the contract will not be taken into account.
Intrade allows short selling. So, anybody can short the 2012 contract, receive $4.50 and use $3.00 to buy the 2013 contract. It is a risk free arbitrage unless one factors in the risk that in the subsequent year from 2012 to the end of 2013, the results will be changed and the arbitrageur will have to pay $10.00 to the 2012 securities without recouping the ten dollars from the 2013 contract.
If the arbitrage works, the short seller will get $4.50 on the 2012 contract and spend $3.00 to buy the 2013 contract, for a gain of $1.50. If Higgs is observed before 2012, the arbitrageur will get $10 on the 2013 contract to use to pay the 2102 contract holder. The arbitrageur keeps the $1.50. If the Higgs is not discovered before 2012, or 2013, the arbitrageur again keeps the $1.50 difference in price. The arbitrageur, without paying more, also has a chance to make an additional $10 if the Higgs is found after 2012 but before the end of 2013.
The fact that Intrade allows shortselling, and the 2012 and 2013 prices are not much closer, indicates to me that the Intrade Higgs market thinks there is some significant probability that false positive results will be announced and subsequently quickly overturned. A 2013 contract holder has the risk that a 2012 contract payment will be made but not a 2013 contract payment.
Intrade Rules
The Intrade rules for payment on the security are:
Confirmation of the Higgs Boson particle having been observed must be published in a major scientific journal for this contract to be expired. Clarification (Jan 5th 2009): for the Higgs Boson particle to be "observed" there must be a "five sigma discovery" of the particle.
Due to the nature of this contract please also see Contract Rule 1.7 Unforeseen Circumstances.
The Exchange reserves the right to invoke Contract Rule 1.8 (Time Protection) if deemed appropriate. [Intrade can unwind trades if occurred within an hour previous to an announcement or news story.]
Any changes to the result after the contract has expired will not be taken into account - Exchange Rule 1.4.
And the market's wrong again today. 2015 "probability" is lower than 2014 "probability"
ReplyDeleteOf course there'e exactly ONE contract available to buy and ONE available to sell for 2015 Higgs.
ReplyDeleteHere is the problem, without enough volume that you're likely to be able to cash out to long a 2015 Higgs you're going to make $2 on a $10 that's possibly tied up for 3 years. Cube root of 20% = 6.2%/yr. Plus it's only the one fuggin contract, who woul waste the time.
ReplyDelete